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Retired Cook County black judge disbarred over fleecing of late Tuskegee Airman uncle

From J D <j_d@invalid.org>
Newsgroups alt.military.retired, chi.general, alt.lawyers, sac.politics, talk.politics.guns, soc.culture.african.american
Subject Retired Cook County black judge disbarred over fleecing of late Tuskegee Airman uncle
Date 2026-02-11 05:00 +0000
Organization A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID <XnsB3EFD5A9684C74043B@0.0.0.1> (permalink)

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https://assets3.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2023/06/28/ddc4e7b7-575e-490c-8
26b-f11ae19d5ae1/thumbnail/620x349/8e288722dc336719e5238c48957e0c20/judge
-patricia-martin.png 

Retired Cook County judge Patricia Martin
Children's Defense Fund

CHICAGO (CBS) -- A former Cook County judge accused of stealing hundreds
of thousands of dollars from her uncle has been stripped of her law
license. 

The Illinois Supreme Court has disbarred Patricia Martin, effective
immediately, after Martin in June admitted to misconduct. 

"She intentionally used for her own purposes more than $240,000 she had
agreed to hold for an elderly relative who was residing in a nursing
home, made false statements to the physician who held her relative's
power of attorney about the balances in his bank and investment
accounts, and did not produce documents in response to an ARDC
subpoena," according to the court's Attorney Registration and
Disciplinary Commission. 

She had been licensed to practice law in Illinois since 1986.

Martin, who spent 24 years on the bench, retired as Cook County's top
juvenile court judge in 2020. 

Around the same time, the Illinois Supreme Court – which investigates
attorney misbehavior – alleges that as her uncle's power of attorney,
Martin "used at least $246,203.80 of… funds without his authority for
her own personal purposes." 

"If you can't trust a judge, who can you trust?" said Ken Rapier, a
friend of Martin's uncle, Oscar Wilkerson, a former Tuskegee Airman who
died in February. "It really upsets me when somebody takes advantage of
the Tuskegee Airmen." 

Five months before he died, Wilkerson – who lived his final days at a
south suburban retirement center – sued Martin. 

The lawsuit accused Martin of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars
from Wilkerson and converting it into "cryptocurrency that she held in
her own name and over which she maintained exclusive control." 

Due to her "continued unresponsiveness" to court hearings and orders, a
judge ordered Martin to pay three times as much - $1.1 million dollars -
to Wilkerson's estate. 

Along the way, court rulings indicate Judge Martin failed to show up and
follow court orders – which led to an investigation by Cook County
State's Attorney Kim Foxx's office. 

Martin has owned since owned up to misconduct.

In an affidavit obtained by CBS 2, Martin acknowledged "the evidence
would clearly and convincingly establish the facts and conclusions of
misconduct." 

CBS 2 Legal Analyst Irv Miller called Martin's admission a massive fall
from grace. 

"It's going to shake the entire Circuit Court of Cook County," he said.
"She's agreeing that the evidence against her clearly - and she uses the
word 'clearly' - establishes that she committed misconduct in this
particular case." 

Despite that admission, Martin has argued she shouldn't have to pay the
$1.1 million to Wilkerson's estate, since her uncle is now dead. 

"The plaintiff's death," her lawyer wrote, "suspend[s] the court's
jurisdiction" in this matter. 

"They're making a technical argument – frankly, it may have merit - that
because the plaintiff died while this proceeding was pending, there is
no proper plaintiff - and if there is no proper plaintiff, the lawsuit
can't proceed," Miller said. 

The States Attorney's office and the Illinois Attorney General are
investigating – and possible felony charges could be coming as well. 

Last month, CBS 2 learned of a new criminal charge from the Cook County
State's Attorney's office. 

The charge is related to court orders - as recently as this April -
where the court ordered Martin "not to move funds of Oscar Wilkerson." 

Regardless, prosecutors say, Judge Martin kept moving funds - $598 here,
$277 there - and more and more. Prosecutors say Martin transferred much
of the money to Bitcoin, and they say have the receipts they say prove
it. 

"Even if you're a former judge, you cannot thumb your nose at a court
order - and that's what the current judge hearing the case has indicated
occurred in this case," Miller said, "and that's why she was pretty
upset about it." 

And there are signs more criminal charges could be coming soon.

As Judge Martin left court in August, Tye asked her if there was
anything she wanted to say. She advised that Tye speak to her attorney,
who said, "We have no comment at this time." 

https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/retired-judge-patricia-martin-disbar
red-fleecing-tuskegee-airman-uncle/ 

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Retired Cook County black judge disbarred over fleecing of late Tuskegee Airman uncle J D <j_d@invalid.org> - 2026-02-11 05:00 +0000

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